
Games People Play
by Eric Berne
Who This Book Is For
An ideal reader of Games People Play is curious, pragmatic, and socially observant—someone who senses recurring friction in conversations and wants a structured way to decode it. They value self-responsibility over blame, prefer practical tools to dense theory, and are willing to journal, role-play, and test small experiments in real interactions. They’ve noticed patterns: advice that always backfires, debates that spiral, or relationships that feel scripted. They’re comfortable with gentle self-examination, but also want language to discuss patterns without shaming others. They work in collaborative settings—managers, therapists-in-training, coaches, educators, product leads—or they’re navigating family dynamics and couplehood. They appreciate concise frameworks (Parent–Adult–Child, strokes, time-structuring), enjoy spotting patterns in dialogue, and like checklists. Most importantly, they’re motivated to replace drama with clarity: shifting from games to clean contracts, from rescuing to boundaries, from gotchas to experiments. They want conversations that actually move work—and relationships—forward. They are patient, coachable, and outcome-focused too.
Book Details
- Categories
- Psychology, Nonfiction, Self Help
- Pages
- 192
- Published
- 1964
- Language
- ENGLISH
- Rating
- 3.7 (40,679 reviews)
What's Inside the Full Summary
- Flow summary for easy, logical understanding
- Key takeaways and actionable insights
- One-page quick summary for busy readers
- Practical tips you can apply today
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